Coronavirus: 280.000 cases in New Europe,11.067 died
In Germany 163860, Balkans (34582), Belarus (17489)
06 May, 11:04The total number of fatalities in the region is 11.067 (+234), out of which 6831 registered in Germany, 803 in Romania, 698 in Poland, 600 in Austria, 363 in Hungary, 316 in Ukraine, 252 in Czechia, 197 in Serbia, 146 in Greece, 133 in Moldova, 103 in Belarus, 97 in Slovenia.
Most of cases of COVID-19 in the area were registered in Germany (163860, +685 in the last 24 hours), followed by Belarus (17489, no data), Austria (15621, +24), Poland (14006, +313), Romania (13512, +349), Ukraine (12697, +366), Serbia (9557, +93), Czechia (7819, +38), Moldova (4248, +127), Hungary (3065, +30), Greece (2632, +6), Croatia (2101, +5), Bosnia-Herzegovina (1926, +69), Estonia (1703, +3), Bulgaria (1652, +34), North Macedonia (1518, +7), Slovenia (1439), Lithuania (1419, +9), Slovakia (1413, +5), Latvia (896, +17), Kosovo (855, +4), Albania (803, +8), and Montenegro (323, +1).
In Slovenia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Romania and in the Western Balkans (Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Albania) 34.582 confirmed cases and 1.499 deaths were registered until May 5.
In Central- and Eastern Europe, Germany has registered about 1971 cases of COVID-19 per million inhabitants, compared to 3504 in Italy, followed by Belarus (1843), Austria (1755), Moldova (1584), and Serbia (1372), while the lowest rate was observed in Bulgaria (236 per million), according to a count by ANSA based on WHO data. Germany has registered also the highest number of deaths per one million population in the region (82), followed by Austria (67) and Moldova (50) and Slovenia (47), Slovakia the lowest (5). Italy has recorded around 481 deaths per million inhabitants.
Between April 27 and May 4, the highest weekly increase of confirmed cases was registered in Belarus (+67.2%), followed by Ukraine (+36,9 %), and Bulgaria (+24,5%), while in Germany, Czechia, Greece, Estonia, Croatia, Austria, Slovenia, Slovakia, Montenegro and Lithuania the weekly increase is now below 5%.
Between April 20 and April 27, the highest weekly increase of confirmed cases was registered in Belarus (+118,9%), followed by Ukraine (+57,8%), Kosovo (+42,6%), Bulgaria (42,1%), Moldova (+37,1%) and Hungary (+30,2%), the lowest in Austria (+3,3%), Montenegro (+4,2%) and Slovenia (+5,8%). Between April 13 and April 20, the highest weekly increases of confirmed cases were registered in Belarus (+85.4%), Ukraine (+84.1%), Serbia (+74.0%), Slovakia (+56.5%) and Moldova (+48.7%), the lowest in Austria (+5.5%), Greece (+5.7%) and Slovenia (+10.4%). (ANSA).